66 Memoirs of the Indian Museitm. [Voi,. Ill, 



Museum. Prof. Hendel (Wien. Entom. Zeit., xxxi, 1912, p. 13) has stated that this species 

 is an African one, belonging to the new genus Conradtina, Enderlein. 



4. *acrostacta, Wiedemann, 1824 (Anal. Entom., 54, iig, and Auss. Zweifl., 1830, ii. 501, 39), both 



as Trypeta, from East India. A very characteristic species, belonging to the new genus 

 Tephrostola. Type in the Museum at Copenhagen. 



5. addens {Dams), Walker, i860 (Proc. Linn. Soc, iv, 149, 177) from Macassar. Is not a 



Trypaneid, as I have stated in Boll. Lab. Portici, iii, 301, (1909), but an Ortalid, and 

 belongs with great probability to the genus S tenopterina as stated by Walker himself. Type 

 in London, British Museum. Prof. Hendel places it in the new genus C onicipithea . 



6. **aenea (Tephritis), Macquart, 1847 (Mem. Soc. Lille, 109, [93], pi. vi, f. 8), from New Holland. 



Seems to be an Ortalid. Type in Verrall's (Bigot's) collection at Newmarket. 



7. aeneus {Dams), Wiedemann, 1819 (Zool. Mag., iii, 29, 44, and Auss. Zweifl., ii, 513, 2), from 



Java. Is the well-known Ortalid Stenopterina aenea. 



8. **aequalis {Dacus), Coquillett, 1909 (Proc. Litm. Soc. N. S. W., xxxiii, 794) from N. S. Wales. 



The description appeared in March, 1909; Froggatt (Report 1909, 91, pi. iii, f. 11) figures 

 the wing and gives a description; both authors say nothing about the chaetotaxy, but 

 the species is probably a Badrocera. Type in Washington, U. S. National Museum. 



9. **albida {Trypeta), Walker, 1853 (Ins. Saunders., iv, 384) from South Australia. Walker 



states that it is an Acinia, R. D. { — Tephritis) ; from the description it seems to be a Try- 

 paneid of the group Trypaneininae but of impossible generic location. Type in London, 

 British Museum. 



10. alboguttata {Themara), Doleschall, 1858-59 (Nat. Tijdschr. N. Indie, xvii, 124, 82) from 



Amboina. Seems to be a föoA;a. Type in Vienna, Imperial Museum. 



11. alboscutellata {Anomoea), Van der Wulp, 1898 (Tijdschr. v. Entom., xli, 217, 4, pi. x, f. 15) 



from Sumatra. The pattern of the wings comes near that of Anomoea, but the position of 



the posterior cross- vein is very different ; I place the species in Acidia. Type at 



Amsterdam ? Prof. Meijere, Tijdschr. v. Entom., liv, p. 385, has described the puparium. 



12. alcestis {Trypeta), Osten-Sacken, 1882 (Berlin. Entom. Zeitschr., xxvi, 229, f. 10) from the 



Philippine Islands. Is a Themara or Acanlhoneura, as stated by the author himself; the 

 spelling alkestis is incorrect. Type in Heidelberg ? According to Enderlein, Zool. Jahrb. 

 Syst. Abt., 191 1, p. 420, belongs to Acanthoneura. 



13. **alvea {Trypeta), Walker, 1849 (List Dipt. Brit. Museum, iv, 1027) from Austraha. Is 



referred by Walker to the gen. Noeeta, R. 'D., = Carphotricha, Loew, and seems to be a true 

 Trypaneinine ; but on account of its dilated wings, perhaps allied to the group of stellata 

 etc., forming a genus related to Eutreta. Type in London, British Museum. 



14. amoyensis {Dams), Bigot MS., Froggatt, 1909 (Report, 99) from Amoy. Is only a MS. name 



in Bigot's, now Verrall's collection at Newmarket. 



15. ampla {Themara), Doleschall, 1858-59 (Nat. Tijdschr. N. Indie, xvii, 154, 81) from 



Amboina. Doleschall has only quoted the name of this species, without description, 

 referring to Walker's species of this name ; but Osten-Sacken, who since Doleschall's 

 death has come into possession of his original unpublished drawings, has stated (Ann. 

 Mus. Civ. Genova, 1882, 19) that this species was a synonym of Rioxa quadrifera, Walker, 

 and was therefore not the same as the following. 



16. ampla {Themara), Walker, 1856 (Proc. Linn. Soc, i, 33, no, pi. i, f. 5) from Singapore. As 



Walker, /. c., p. 134, says, the present species is the female of Achias maculipennis, West- 

 wood, 1848, which, as stated by Osten-Sacken in Ann. Mus. Civ, Genova, 1881, p. 461, 

 is a Trypaneid allied to Acanthoneura, Macq. ; on account of the widened head of the 

 male, the gen. Themara can perhaps be retained as distinct. Type in London, British 

 Museum. 



17. amplipennis {Trypeta), Walker, i860 (Proc. Linn. Soc, iv, 159, 199) from Macassar and 



